1983 BORDEAUX

1983 bordeaux
By schuey (originally posted to Flickr as Cheval Blanc 1983) [CC BY 2.0], via Wikimedia Commons

Every year seems to bring up new special anniversary wine tastings. Next year undoubtedly will include a focus on how the 1989 Bordeaux and underrated Burgundies are doing at 25. This year I attended several enjoyable events spotlighting 1983 red Bordeaux at 30 years!

Coming right after the ripe concentrated consistent 1982 was a tough task. The 1983 micro climates varied really favouring the southerly drier Medoc regions of AOC Margaux & Pessac-Leognan. Also the hot humid conditions in August resulted in some grape rot & mildew especially where the principals were away on their annual vacation rather than at home in the vineyards like May de Lencquesaing of Pichon Lalande. Their wine is in my opinion the best most complete complex Pauillac in 1983 edging Mouton (cedar) and far better than Lafite (paler and drier) and Latour (atypically light herbal).

What about the wine of the vintage? Domaine de Chevalier and Haut Bailly are typical of a certainly better 1983 than 1982. However Haut Brion & La Mission both show better in 1982 than 1983. Not outstanding on the Right Bank. There are some delicious elegant wines from the Margaux appellation in 1983. Palmer is a star but I have found bottle variation recently as it ages. Served to me blind against Chateau Margaux (and other 1983 wines) twice in the last few months Palmer was both times lighter in colour less structured and less aromatic than Chateau Margaux – a real classic.  Robert Parker prefers Palmer and I agree with him that Chateau Margaux 1983 can have “cork” issues. Still I prefer 1989 Palmer over 1983 – and of course that marvellous trio of 1970, 1966, and 1961.

My vote now for what can be THE wine of vintage 1983 in Bordeaux is Chateau Margaux. One of their many successes under the brilliant Mentzelopoulus & Pontellier team!

Post your vote for the Bordeaux wine of the 1983 vintage. Your thoughts on how they are aging.

Have you tried a 1983 Bordeaux?

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RED FRUITS vs. BLACK FRUITS

Red vs Black fruits

The regular wine column every weekend in The Vancouver Sun newspaper by my long time good friend Tony Gismondi just raised some interesting issues.

Tony postulates that “After decades of chasing intensity and concentration of fruit along with a commensurate level of oak and alcohol, the style of red wine is fundamentally changing in many regions of the world.”  Check out his comments at www.vancouversun.com/entertainment/world+reds/9116810/story.html

As we all know It is extremely difficult to make a great wine anywhere in the world. The climatic conditions can vary from marginal ripeness like for sparkling wine in England (remember Nyetimber in West Sussex declaring no 2012 vintage) to excessive heat in parts of Barossa Australia (will this shiraz need acidification?). It is impossible to obtain perfect growing conditions every year even in Bordeaux or Burgundy. Most knowledgeable consumers are looking for some definition or “sense of place”  in their wine. Just letting the terroir speak can sometimes be overlooked by zealous winemakers. One of the best tests of quality for me is to decide whether the wine is balanced and delicious – inviting you to go back and drink more. This important measure is hard to judge in a wine competition where you are not swallowing the wine for that test but spitting it out. There has been a tendency by some judges to go for the biggest, richest, openly expressive higher alcohol wines. Remember less is often more in finding that “finesse and grace”.  I personally have been an outspoken champion of this latter point of view in wine competitions for decades.

I am encouraged to see this article stating that the new “goal is to bring those grapes to perfect ripeness in almost every vintage and to harvest red fruits over black, finesse over power, leading to drinkability over all other attributes.” Hopefully this will lead to better more distinctive complex drinkable wines. Bravo!

What are your thoughts on red fruits vs. black fruits or what attributes you look for in a red table wine?

What type of grape do you prefer?

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BEST CORKSCREW

What is the best corkscrew to use?

Most of us remember not that many years ago when it was an absolute necessity to have a corkscrew to open every bottle of wine. Of course now there are many screw cap closures which provide an easy opening without the ritual of using one.

However most age worthy reds and treasured old bottles still require a corkscrew.

There are so many products out there on the market to choose from.  Even drill types with interchangeable bits!  Such a problem. What to use?

I started with the double lever style but quickly graduated to the reliable  “waiter’s style” single lever. Still a fav of mine particularly with that silicone coating on the screw. You have total control. Also have used successfully the “Screwpull” and the “Prong” (“AH-So”) types which have their place. However, the Screwpull goes right through the bottom of the cork which is the most fragile part and does not always work successfully on old crumbly corks.

Starting to prefer the last few years the “Durand” (www.thedurand.com) from Wining Taylors LLC in Atlanta Georgia. I used it this month to open a bottle of 1966 Chateau Grand Puy Lacoste from Pauillac after a difficult cork experience on a previous one I opened.  Worked like a charm! Seems to always work though the instructions say “intended to remove only older fragile corks from bottles with an inside neck opening of approximately 3/4 inch”. The principle is a screwed helix into the centre of the cork until a stabilizer bar rests against the top of the cork  and then blades go down either side like the Prong to hold onto it. Expensive but very dependable and maybe worth it. Certainly check it out.

What is the best corkscrew for you to avoid the cork breaking or the risk of getting crumbly pieces of the cork falling into your wine?

What corkscrew do you use?

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WINTER SQUASHES

Winter squashes

The Fall season has arrived for the versatile underrated vegetable of Winter squashes. These are to be differentiated from Summer squashes such as zucchini. Driving by the family owned Mariposa Fruit Stand on Highway 3 at Keremeos, British Columbia we had to stop attracted by the multi coloured bins piled high.  Loaded up our car with several of the many varieties there including acorn, butternut, delicata, turban, kabocha (buttercup), and the newer grey ghost (a kabocha hybrid). Also the new crop of Gala & Ambrosia apples as well.

Brief thoughts about a few varieties:

Acorn – smaller green shaped like an acorn, yellow orange inside, harder to peel, don’t keep quite as long, stuff them.

Butternut – shaped like a bell or pear with a narrower neck, yellow inside and perhaps sweetest.

Delicata – smaller oblong shape like an exotic cucumber with stripes, thin skin, keep shorter time, almost sweet potato texture and corn flavours.

Turban – irregular shapes with turban shaped top, milder, for soups, use as decoration like a gourd.

Kabocha – round squat like a dark green pumpkin, harder to cut, sweeter orange flesh, less fibre makes for a smooth nutty puree.

Spaghetti – oval oblong paler yellow flesh, less sweet, stringy and scoop out after cooked with a fork to make strands.

Hubbard – very large blue green thick rough skin, orange/yellow flesh, keep well, milder, great roasted.

We successfully grew acorn in our home garden.

Cooking tips by Joan Cross:

Except for delicata and spaghetti squash which can be steamed or baked to show off their delicate character this following method should work well for most winter squashes: Cut in half, remove seeds, rub cut surfaces with EVOO and S & P. Place cut side down on parchment paper (www.paperchef.com). Roast 375F until fork tender. Cut surfaces will caramelize.

Serve as a versatile vegetable in pieces as a side dish or as a puree by itself or in a soup; in a ravioli; roasted, small cubes in a risotto; in your bread or baking (instead of pumpkin puree in a pie) etc. For a soup you can also use a leek and/or an apple with some fresh herbs or spices to taste. Enjoy!

Do you use winter squash? What is your personal favourite variety? Let us have your best recipe.

No marshmallows please!

What's your favorite winter squash?

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BRITISH COLUMBIA WINES

British Colubmia Wine

Back from some interesting days as one of nine judges for the yearly BC Wine Awards as part of the Okanagan Fall Wine Festival (www.thewinefestivals.com/wine_awards/british-columbia-wine-awards). Good to catch up with my old time friend Dan Berger from Santa Rosa in California who also does the Riverside International Wine Competition (www.riwc.net).

I continue to be impressed with the progress being made by BC wines. After 2 cooler vintages of 2010 and 2011 favouring whites and earlier ripening reds the warming trend of 2012 and especially 2013 has returned. As the picking continues currently it looks like this year should produce some of the very best late ripening red wines ever for the region!

You will see the worthy winners for this year’s BC Wine Awards listed on the website.

Riesling and chenin blanc especially both varieties from older vines (35+ years) are doing exceptionally well for whites. Syrah, cabernet franc, and pinot noir are improving every vintage and some examples are nearing world class.

Always a sense of pride to get outside endorsement and Mission Hill Family Estate Martin’s Lane pinot noir 2011 has done that. It just won in London, England the Decanter World Wine Awards International Trophy for the Best in Show pinot noir priced under 15 pounds. Pretty good for an unknown wine region in a competition of 14,000 wines from 61 world wine regions.

Check out some of these improving BC wines! Have you tried any BC wines you enjoyed or that you would recommend?

Have you tried wine from B.C.?

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